How to Start a Blog for Your Business
The reasons so many startups and small businesses do not blog are many and include the following:
- Not enough time
- Can’t write well enough
- Not enough content
- Don’t see the advantages
These are valid points that anyone can make, however, the biggest obstacle in those who “get” content marketing and really understand that the need to blog is this – they just don’t know where to start.
To help everyone overcome that obstacle, here’s a step-by-step plan to get you started blogging regularly, consistently and effectively.
1. Choose a service/platform
Sometimes this decision is the hardest one. Isn’t it odd, when life gives you too many choices that it’s even harder to make a decision? But fear not. Here’s a short list that beginners won’t find overwhelming.
WordPress
Simply the easiest, most flexible, most popular and most well-supported platform for anyone to start blogging.Blogger
Google’s clean and simple blogging service gives you a free yourblog.blogspot.com domain or your can use your own custom URL, e.g., yourblog.comTumblr
Yahoo has acquired Tumblr and has generally left the service alone, allowing Tumblr to remain a really, really simple user experience.Medium
If you just want to write and show off beautiful images, Medium (built by the same guy who created Blogger back in the day) is for you.
Don’t fret too much about it. Just pick one and make a start. A year from now, if you want to switch to a different blogging platform, you can do it. It’s not the end of the world.
2. Ask a few questions: who, what, where, when, why?
More specifically, you should ask these questions about your intended audience. Your target audience could be your customers, your prospects, your partners, your community of resellers or a group of users who cause your community to thrive.
Asking and answering these questions as the purpose of your blog will help you every time you sit in front of that blank screen wondering what to write.
Here’s some food for thought on each of these questions.
Why are you blogging?
You need to understand why you are blogging for your brand. That’s part of your plan (next step).Who do you want to read your blog?
This answer is the audience you will reach with your words.What does your audience like to read or consume?
For example, images or video or podcastsWhere are your readers?
When can you write and when will your audience read?
Both are very important. You will develop a rhythm of blogging, whether it’s daily, weekly, monthly or 2-3 times per week.
3. Prepare a plan for your blog
The worst mistake you can make when you start a blog for your business is not having a plan. What does that mean? Well, the result of not having a content marketing plan looks like this: “Ok. What should I write for today’s blog post?” Don’t do that. Create a plan, no matter how simple.
Here are the basic elements of your content marketing plan for the first 3 months.
Goals
Back to the why you’re writing a blog question, you aren’t just blogging to say that your company has a blog. You must have goals before you start.
Some common goals of a blog are:
– to establish your company as an authority in your market space
– to share your customers’ successes
– to generate buzz for an upcoming launchWriting team
Who owns this blog? In a small company or startup, it might be just you.
Pro Tip: Make sure company leadership is completely 100% on board with content marketing as part of the company’s marketing plan.Posting frequency
How often will you publish posts? Decide and agree on a frequency (daily, weekly, twice a week, but no less than once a month) and stick to it.Post length
For SEO purposes, 300-500 words is optimal. However, you should try (and measure) different length posts to see what your audience prefers.Post image types (or not)
Decide from the start whether you will use images in your blog posts and to promote your blog posts. Use at least one beautiful, relevant image in each post and promote it.Subject matter categories
What sort of topics will you write about? You really want to decide this long before the first post.
The idea behind your plan, no matter how simple the plan, is to make sure you never ever sit down in front of that blank screen knowing you have to publish a blog post later today and asking yourself, “So, what should today’s post be about?” Don’t do that. Create a plan.
4. Tell your story
Many conversations starts with, “But I just don’t know what we should even write about!” It’ll come back to your plan (above), but in its simplest form.
A blog is, by definition, a “web log” of happenings or events or thoughts. So when you start your company’s blog, start by telling your story, one little bit at a time. If it’s your company, then nobody is as good as you at telling the story, because you invented the story. So tell it. Break it down into digestible chunks and write it.
The most important purpose of a blog is for the readers to get to know the people behind the blog. When someone reads your content that you’ve written, they are consuming your content and getting to know who you are and what you’re all about.
5. Check your grammar
Not everyone majored in English in college. For those who did, it’s their blessing to understand grammar and their curse to not be able to correct every single mistake they see on the internet.
For the everyday blog writer, if you are not comfortable with your own grammar knowledge, you are not alone. That’s why there are free services like Grammarly to do it for you. Give it a try, and if you don’t like it, that’s ok. Maybe find someone – on your team or outside – to do a simple grammar check on each of your blog posts.
There are those who think that grammar is not important in this text language world. It may not be important to you, but there is no quicker way to remove a reader from your audience than to make a big, ugly, glaring grammatical mistake on an important point.
6. Promote your blog
If you don’t tell anyone, then nobody will read your blog. Your most effective methods of promoting your blog are as follows.
- Link to your blog front and centre on your website.
- Use your blog content in your monthly newsletter if you have one (you should).
- Share each blog post appropriately on all your social media channels. There are best practices for sharing on each different social media channel and you will do well to follow them.
- Make sure everyone else in the company also shares it to their social networks and give them appropriate text and images to use.
- Measure it. You cannot change what you do not measure. Remember that as you start your blogging adventure.
If you use WordPress or Blogger, the stats are built in so you can see how many people are reading your blog posts, how long they’re staying on each page, which are your most popular posts and what they are clicking on when they arrive at your blog. Those are easy to do and you should align your goals with your measurements, so you can tell at a glance if you are hitting your goals or not.
Establish goals first, then measure against them regularly (weekly, monthly, quarterly, annually).
7. Iterate
Not meeting your goals or blowing past them? Then it’s time for a change.
If you’re not meeting your goals, try something – anything – different. Longer posts. Shorter posts. More images. Fewer images. Do something different to see if it moves the needles in your statistics. That’s the beauty of digital content marketing. You can change it as often as you want to meet your goals.
The most important part of changing though, is resetting goals and expectations. When you change strategy or tactics, your goals will change, too.
8. Repeat
That’s right, repeat! Whatever you’ve done right, do more of it. Whatever you’ve done wrong, change it. The more often you post, the more and faster you will learn and the more effective you will become in your content marketing.
Getting over the first hump of actually creating and maintaining an active blog is the hardest and most important step. You can start an effective, popular blog if you follow these simple steps. Then you’ll be able to enjoy all the benefits of content marketing for your brand.
SOURCE: General Assembly
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